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Archives for July 2019

Minor Transactions: 07/18/19

July 18, 2019 at 3:27 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

As July marches on and we get closer to arbitration hearings and contract holdouts, teams continue to fill our their organizational depth charts. Here are some minor moves from around the league:

  • The Toronto Marlies continue to add more depth, signing Ryan Johnston and Michael Kapla to AHL contracts. Kapla spent last season with the Binghamton Devils and Iowa Wild, recording 24 points in 66 games. The defenseman is a former Umass-Lowell captain that played five games in the NHL during the 2016-17 season. Johnston meanwhile spent the last two seasons in the SHL, but also has ten games of NHL experience under his belt.
  • The Hershey Bears have signed Tariq Hammond to an AHL deal, bringing in another former Binghamton defenseman. The 25-year old played 43 games for the AHL Devils last season, recording three points. Hammond was part of the 2017 NCAA champion University of Denver squad alongside other NHL players like Troy Terry, Henrik Borgstrom, Dylan Gambrell and Will Butcher, and took over as captain the following season.
  • The Hartford Wolf Pack have signed Ryan Dmowski to another AHL deal, keeping him in the organization after he joined them earlier this spring out of college. The 22-year old left winger had four points in ten games down the stretch for the Wolf Pack, and will likely be asked to play a bigger role in his first full professional season.
  • Carolina has brought in some AHL depth, announcing the signings of wingers Hunter Shinkaruk and Colin Markison plus defenseman Derek Sheppard to AHL deals.  Shinkaruk, a first-round pick of Vancouver back in 2013, had a disastrous season with Montreal’s farm team and was non-tendered last month.  Meanwhile, Markison has posted back-to-back 27-point seasons with Texas of the AHL while Sheppard was quite productive at the ECHL last season with 40 points in 57 games.

AHL| Carolina Hurricanes| New York Rangers| Toronto Maple Leafs| Transactions| Washington Capitals

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Winnipeg Jets Renew ECHL Affiliation

July 18, 2019 at 2:05 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 1 Comment

The Winnipeg Jets have renewed their partnership with the Jacksonville Icemen for the 2019-20 season, once again giving them an ECHL affiliate to help develop their prospects. The teams have been partnered for the last two seasons. Head coach Jason Christie has also been given a multi-year extension, keeping him in the Jets organization.

The Icemen—not to be confused with the ICE, the new junior hockey team in Winnipeg—made the ECHL playoffs last season after a 36-32-4 record in the regular season but were ousted quickly in round one. Like most other low minor teams, they housed several journeymen and plenty of raw prospects looking to develop their skills. Notably on the team was goaltender Mikhail Berdin, who is on his entry-level contract with the Jets after being selected in the 2016 draft. The ECHL is often a place for the organization’s goaltending prospects, giving them a chance to get game action against professionals on a nightly basis.

Christie meanwhile returns for his seventh season as the ECHL coach for Winnipeg, and is the all-time leader in league wins. He is still looking for his first Kelly Cup championship however, something the Icemen will try to bring home in 2020.

ECHL| Prospects| Winnipeg Jets

1 comment

Ron Francis Officially Named GM Of Seattle Expansion Team

July 18, 2019 at 11:58 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

The Seattle expansion team has officially announced the hiring of their first ever general manager. Ron Francis, legendary NHL player and former Carolina Hurricanes GM has been hired for the job. The team released an exhaustive history of Francis’ hockey career, explaining exactly why they chose him and including several quotes from other executives around the league. One from Mike Vellucci, who was an assistant GM during Francis’ tenure in Carolina, explains how he’ll build the Seattle team:

Ron is an intelligent manager who knows the kind of players he wants. He will draft and acquire players with a high-hockey IQ who understand how to play together, think a couple plays ahead and know the right way to play the game. He looks for players with high-level skills, such as skating, puck protection and stick-handling.

Though he left the Hurricanes before they experienced so much success last season, his fingerprints are still all over the roster. Most notably perhaps was his selection of Sebastian Aho in the second round of the 2015 draft, a player that currently sits fifth in scoring among that draft class behind only Connor McDavid, Jack Eichel, Mitch Marner and Mikko Rantanen.

Francis will need to find some steals like that if he wants the Seattle team to be competitive quickly. Though they will have the same rules for the expansion draft that Vegas took advantage of, teams will likely be much more prepared this time around. An advantage he will have however is the almost two full years of preparation he now has, as the Seattle front office including CEO Tod Leiweke have committed to a GM earlier than any other expansion team. Francis will have a say in the training facilities for both the NHL team and the proposed AHL affiliate in Palm Springs, building the entire player development department from the ground up.

Still, it will be a tough task for Seattle to follow in the incredible footsteps of the Golden Knights and GM George McPhee. Reaching the Stanley Cup Final in their inaugural season should not be an expectation, and likely isn’t even a goal of this group. Francis’ plan in Carolina included a slow build through the draft given the team’s limited resources, and even with an increase in those it seems as though he’ll follow a similar path.

The Seattle team—which still does not have a name as of now—will begin play in the 2021-22 season.

Expansion| Seattle Ron Francis

3 comments

Morning Notes: Kelly, Rantanen, Penguins

July 18, 2019 at 11:46 am CDT | by Gavin Lee 6 Comments

The Boston Bruins have hired former NHL forward Chris Kelly as a player development coordinator. The 38-year old was with the Ottawa Senators last season as a development coach, and is only just removed from a professional playing career that spanned 17 years, including an appearance at the 2018 Olympics for Team Canada. Kelly suited up 288 times in the regular season for the Bruins, and was part of the team that won the Stanley Cup in 2011. The team has also hired long-time pro scout Andrew Dickson, who was most recently with the Detroit Red Wings.

More notes from around the league…

  • The KHL rights for Mikko Rantanen have been traded, as the league prepares for the possibility of a potential NHL work stoppage. Even though Rantanen still doesn’t have a contract with the Colorado Avalanche, the acquisition by Ak Bars Kazan should not be considered an indication that he is heading overseas. Rantanen has developed into one of the premiere offensive wingers in the entire world, and should a work stoppage actually occur in the coming years teams all over the world will be scrambling for his (temporary) services.
  • Josh Yohe of The Athletic (subscription required) still believes that the Pittsburgh Penguins will make another trade before the end of the offseason, and has updated his look at the likelihood of that for each roster player. Yohe continues to list Nick Bjugstad, Bryan Rust and Tristan Jarry in the “favorite” category, though examines everyone else thoroughly (okay, Sidney Crosby’s blurb is anything but thorough). The Penguins re-signed Teddy Blueger recently and are now have less than $1MM in cap space remaining with Zach Aston-Reese and Marcus Pettersson still sitting as restricted free agents. While there is certainly some ways to wiggle around the cap issue, the team would still be pushed right to the ceiling all season and limited to what they can do to improve the club. A trade to free up some more cash does seem likely, though how long it will take for that to happen is unclear.

Boston Bruins| Colorado Avalanche| KHL| Pittsburgh Penguins Chris Kelly| Mikko Rantanen

6 comments

New York Rangers Agree To Terms With Phillip Di Giuseppe

July 18, 2019 at 10:45 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Though it has been expected for a few days, the New York Rangers finally made it official today when announcing they have agreed to terms with Phillip Di Giuseppe on a one-year contract. Di Giuseppe was an unrestricted free agent after failing to receive a qualifying offer from the Nashville Predators.

The 25-year old was picked 38th overall in 2012 by the Carolina Hurricanes, and eventually found a way onto the team as the 12th or 13th forward. Playing 147 games over parts of four seasons for the Hurricanes, he recorded 41 points but never could quite escape the minor leagues entirely. Last year after being placed on waivers for the second time, he was claimed by the Predators and played three games for them. Held scoreless in those he was on waivers once again and even the Hurricanes didn’t put in a claim to bring him back. He finished the year with the Milwaukee Admirals of the AHL.

Even if Di Giuseppe isn’t going to make a huge impact at the NHL level, he still represents some nice forward depth for the Rangers. He can be the first call-up if the team runs into injury trouble and doesn’t want to sit a top prospect in the press box, or serve as an experienced leader at the AHL level. He will need waivers again obviously, but at the end of training camp when everyone has a full roster it would be surprising to see him claimed. That is of course assuming he doesn’t play his way onto the team, which is still possible given the uncertainty any roster filled with prospects and rookies has.

New York Rangers

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Brock McGinn, Carolina Hurricanes Exchange Arbitration Figures

July 18, 2019 at 9:49 am CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

Brock McGinn’s arbitration hearing is first on the books this year, scheduled for Saturday in Toronto. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet has received word on the figures exchanged from both sides, tweeting that McGinn’s camp is looking for $2.7MM while Carolina is hoping for $1.75MM. It is important to remember that not only can the two sides still negotiate a different deal in the time remaining (and even for a short period after the hearing), the arbitration decision also does not need to be one figure or the other. The award can (and usually does) fall somewhere in the middle of the submitted salaries.

McGinn, 25, is coming off a two-year, $1.775MM contract so regardless of where the decision lands he is about to get a healthy raise. The second round pick has developed into a useful bottom-six winger that can chip in offensively from time to time and bring a strong level of physicality every night. Though he had just ten goals in 2018-19 he had 16 the year prior, and is the team’s leading penalty killing forward. That’s a useful piece for a team trying to return to the playoffs and contend for the Stanley Cup, especially when he has shown he can play up in the lineup when asked to, at least for short periods of time.

The Hurricanes have a few other restricted free agents to sign but are working with a healthy amount of cap space even after signing Sebastian Aho to a big extension and bringing in some help up front. With additions like Ryan Dzingel and Erik Haula the team should have a deeper group of forwards who can score, letting others like McGinn feast on even easier matchups.

Remember that the team is allowed to select whether the award is for one or two years, a decision that may not be quite so simple. While a one-year term would leave McGinn a restricted free agent again next summer, a two-year award would lock him in at a reasonable number while the team works to build the rest of the roster. Cost controlled players are valuable, and there would still be the option to extend him at some point before he reached unrestricted free agency in 2021. None of that will matter if the two sides can work out a deal in the coming days however, which is still definitely a possibility.

Arbitration| Carolina Hurricanes Brock McGinn| Elliotte Friedman

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Poll: How Many Unresolved Arbitration Cases Will Require An Award?

July 17, 2019 at 7:52 pm CDT | by Zach Leach 3 Comments

In the NHL, the salary arbitration process is more often used as a negotiating tool – an incentive to get a deal done before the uncomfortable setting of a hearing and the unknown of an arbitrator’s decision – than it is for its actual purpose. A vast majority of players who file for arbitration end up settling before their hearing or even at the last moment before an award is handed down. Last year, 44 players filed for arbitration and 40 settled prior to their hearing. The year before, all 30 cases were resolved before an arbitration award could be made.

So what about this year? There were initially 40 cases of player-elected arbitration and one case of team-elected arbitration (the St. Louis Blues and goalie Ville Husso), but that number is now down to 25 open cases. That’s a substantial drop-off, but time is running out for some RFA’s and their teams to come to terms, as the first scheduled hearing is set to take place on Saturday, July 20th. Listed below are all of the remaining cases:

July 20: Brock McGinn, Carolina Hurricanes
July 21: Andrew Copp, Winnipeg Jets
July 22: MacKenzie Weegar, Florida Panthers; Zach Aston-Reese, Pittsburgh Penguins; Ville Husso, St. Louis Blues; Christian Djoos, Washington Capitals
July 23: Evan Rodrigues, Buffalo Sabres
July 24: Oskar Sundqvist, St. Louis Blues; Neal Pionk, Winnipeg Jets
July 25: Jacob Trouba, New York Rangers
July 26: Colton Sissons, Nashville Predators
July 27: Sam Bennett, Calgary Flames
July 28: Mirco Mueller, New Jersey Devils
July 29: David Rittich, Calgary Flames; Pavel Buchnevich, New York Rangers
August 1: Remi Elie, Buffalo Sabres; Chandler Stephenson, Washington Capitals
August 2: Linus Ullmark, Buffalo Sabres; Charles Hudon, Montreal Canadiens; Will Butcher, New Jersey Devils
August 4: Jake McCabe, Buffalo Sabres; Anton Forsberg, Carolina Hurricanes; Sheldon Dries, Colorado Avalanche; Rocco Grimaldi, Nashville Predators; Joel Edmundson, St. Louis Blues

Given the time constraints and the complexity of each of these cases, how many will feel forced to go to hearing? Will Trouba be one of that select group, as he was last year? Will the Sabres struggle to settle four cases before their scheduled hearing dates? Will the Blues see through their team-elected case with Husso? Will other goalies prove to be difficult negotiations? And will polarizing players like Bennett and Buchnevich fail to find common ground with their teams? Or will it be under-the-radar players like Gemel Smith and Brett Kulak last year who go through the full process?

There are many questions left about this group of restricted free agents and time is running out before we know the answers. So the choice is yours: will we see an unprecedented class of arbitration awards or will all or most cases reach a resolution in the coming weeks?

[Mobile users click here to vote]

Arbitration| Buffalo Sabres| Calgary Flames| Carolina Hurricanes| Colorado Avalanche| Florida Panthers| Montreal Canadiens| Nashville Predators| New Jersey Devils| New York Rangers| Pittsburgh Penguins| RFA| St. Louis Blues| Washington Capitals| Winnipeg Jets Andrew Copp| Anton Forsberg| Brock McGinn| Chandler Stephenson| Charles Hudon| Christian Djoos| Colton Sissons| David Rittich| Evan Rodrigues| Jacob Trouba| Jake McCabe| Joel Edmundson| Linus Ullmark| Mirco Mueller| Neal Pionk| Oskar Sundqvist| Pavel Buchnevich

3 comments

Lightning Re-Sign Dominik Masin

July 17, 2019 at 6:02 pm CDT | by Zach Leach Leave a Comment

Another day, another restricted free agent back under contract with the Tampa Bay Lightning. After inking Ben Thomas to an extension yesterday, the team has announced that fellow RFA defenseman Dominik Masin has also re-signed. It is a one-year, two-way contract for Masin. No financial terms were disclosed, but CapFriendly anticipates a minimum $700K NHL salary.

Masin, 23, has been a long-term project for the Bolts whose potential is still unclear. A 2014 second-round pick out of the Czech Republic, Masin played two productive years in the OHL before turning pro in 2016. He immediately jumped into a starting role with the AHL’s Syracuse Crunch, but struggled to put up points in his first season. That changed in 2017-18, when Masin finished second among Crunch defenders with 24 points in 72 games. Yet, he regressed offensively this season, dropping to 12 points in 69 games. On the other hand, his defense improved and his +36 rating led the team and was among the best in the league. Masin has yet to make an NHL appearance, but this season may finally offer him a chance to debut and for Tampa to get a better idea of what they have in the prospect.

With Masin locked up, the Lightning are down to just two RFA’s left to sign: Adam Erne and Brayden Point. Point has been and will continue to be Tampa Bay’s biggest priority this summer. The team has a projected $5.58MM in cap space, but will need much more than that to get Point re-signed, not to mention Erne.

AHL| RFA| Tampa Bay Lightning Adam Erne| Brayden Point

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Joe Hicketts Re-Signs With Detroit Red Wings

July 17, 2019 at 4:50 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee Leave a Comment

The Detroit Red Wings have re-signed defenseman Joe Hicketts to a two-year contract, bringing back a key member of the Grand Rapids Griffins. Hicketts will qualify for Group VI unrestricted free agency at the end of the deal unless he plays in at least a total of 64 NHL games over the next two seasons.

Now 23, Hicketts was an free agent signing out of the WHL in 2014 after no one took a chance on him in the draft. That was likely due to his diminutive stature, but the young defenseman proceeded to dominate his junior opponents over the next two seasons, recording 125 points in 121 games for the Victoria Royals. Upon graduating to professional hockey, little has changed as Hicketts is still a strong point producer in the AHL and continues to quarterback their powerplay.

Unfortunately, that success at the minor league level hasn’t translated into much opportunity for Hicketts in the NHL. He has played just 16 games with the Red Wings including 11 last season, and has three points. It’s hard to imagine that will change this year after the team brought in some new faces like Patrik Nemeth, Oliwer Kaski and Madison Bowey. Not to mention the team has plenty of young defense prospects pushing their way up the ladder, giving Hicketts even more competition for playing time in the future.

That said, a two-year deal will provide some security and stability for the 23-year old and is a nice reward just a few years after no one believed he would ever reach the NHL at all. He’ll need to clear waivers to start in the minor leagues, but with the length of this deal that shouldn’t be a problem for the Red Wings.

Detroit Red Wings

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Latest On Brendan Perlini

July 17, 2019 at 4:47 pm CDT | by Gavin Lee 3 Comments

The Chicago Blackhawks have completely overhauled their roster over the last several weeks, and just yesterday completed a trade to send Artem Anisimov to the Ottawa Senators. That freed up $1.3MM in cap space for each of the next two seasons, giving GM Stan Bowman a little more room to operate. Today, Bowman spoke with reporters including Charlie Roumeliotis of NBC Sports Chicago about several topics from development camp including unsigned restricted free agent forward Brendan Perlini:

We had some roster things we had to take care of to be in a position to sign him. Negotiations are probably going to pick up as we go forward here. …I don’t have a timetable on when we’re going to get him signed.

Notably, Perlini’s name was included in a report on the weekend that indicated he was being shopped around the league in trade talks. Anisimov was also in that report, but that came as little surprise given his declining role with the team and hefty cap hit. Perlini meanwhile is just 23 years old still and five years removed from being the 12th player picked in the 2014 draft. The Blackhawks acquired him along with Dylan Strome during last season and though he didn’t make quite the same impact, Perlini still did score 12 goals in 46 games for Chicago—an 82-game pace of 21.

Nine of those goals (and two of his three Blackhawks assists) came in the last 17 games of the season for Perlini, indicating that perhaps he had found some level of comfort on the roster after failing to fit in right away. Now the team has to decide what that is worth moving forward, especially given they still don’t have a ton of cap room available. After changing basically half of the roster in a month, the team is sitting with just over $3.3MM in cap space with only 20 players signed. That doesn’t leave much space for Perlini, who obviously turned down his $874K qualifying offer and is looking for more than that.

The 6’3″ forward is obviously not someone you want to discard and give up on, but with the recent additions of young players like Kirby Dach, Dominik Kubalik and Alexander Nylander, the Blackhawks do have some other ways to fill out the rest of the roster for a very low cost. All three of those young forwards are on entry-level deals, but none are tested at the NHL level just yet. Perlini, like many of the other restricted free agents who are not eligible for arbitration, is in a tough negotiating situation where cap room on the other side is limited. We’ll have to keep watch and see if they can come to an agreement, or if Bowman will have make yet another move.

Chicago Blackhawks| Stan Bowman Artem Anisimov| Brendan Perlini

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